Preview

Pig Lovers and Pig Haters

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1662 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Pig Lovers and Pig Haters
ANP 320
9-26-2013
Pig Lovers and Pig Haters This article relates to what we have learned about materialism. Harris goes in depth explaining the differences between pig haters and pig lovers, and what that meant for their societies. Harris wants to know “how to account for an apparently bizarre and wasteful taboo” (45). He explains the history of pig hatred for the Jews and Moslems, stating that the Bible condemned them from eating pig because they were dirty. Every reason given for why pigs are hated was irrational in the sense that the same thing could ultimately be said about most other animals. Harris’ reasoning brings the history of the people and the land into account. They were nomadic pastoralists and the climate and location simply was not good to be raising pigs. They would have required too much energy to raise, for not as much output for the people. Harris took and ecological approach to explain away pig hatred. When it comes to pig lovers, Harris goes into great detail on the Maring clans in New Guinea. Long story short, they raise pigs because they are holy and need to sacrifice them to their ancestors in order to declare war and make peace. They are raised for years on end, and take up more and more energy as the years go on. However, unlike the pig haters, the Maring people live in an area perfect for pigs. Pigs also give them necessary nutrients and protein for their fighting. Harris states, “Rappaport insists –correctly, I believe- that in a fundamental ecological sense, the size of a group’s pig surplus does indicate its productive and military strength and does validate or invalidate its territorial claims. In other words, the entire system results in an efficient distribution of plants, animals, and people in the region, from a human ecological point of view”(56). Both of his examples show materialism taking place in cultures and he goes further in to explain how these pigs actually affect the lives of the people and, in

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The pigs force the hens to lay more eggs and the cows to produce more milk to sell, all whilst claiming the farm is running better than it had before the revolution. The story ends with the pigs refuting the rules that were the tenets of the rebellion. “The creatures looked from pig to man, and from man to pig; but already it was impossible to say which was which”. This shows that the farm is no longer democratic, and the pigs are now just like men, the former dictators.…

    • 604 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pollan, Michael. “The Feedlot: Making Meat.” The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals. (2006): 70-84. Print.…

    • 317 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Pig Dissection

    • 6091 Words
    • 25 Pages

    Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.…

    • 6091 Words
    • 25 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Food production led to the advancements of many people around the world. The author describes food production as the domestication of animals and deriving plants for the benefits for the human use. Due to food production, populations also started to grow. People were using increased crops to make money, cows for their milk, and other animals for transportation.”…

    • 1352 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Michael Pollan’s, The Omnivores Dilemma everything we eat is somehow derived from corn. Dating back to the day of the Mayans when they were sometimes referred to as “the corn people” (Pollan 19). Pollan takes us back to the “beginning” of the industrial food chain. In The Omnivores Dilemma historical context, ideology, and setting do not do the reader justice in opening their eyes to the harsh reality that without the corn industry eating as we know it today would cease to exist.…

    • 684 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In PBS’s episode one entitled Out of Eden of the series Gun’s Germs, and Steel, Professor Jared Diamond attempts to answer the question of “why you white men have so much cargo and we New Guineans have so little.” (Cassian Harrison, 2005) Professor Diamond’s begins his research by diving into history from 13,000 years ago, pre-dating civilizations, during a time period equivalent to New Guinea’s present day. Professor Diamond noted that “because hunting is so unpredictable, traditional societies have usually relied more on gathering.” (Cassian Harrison, 2005) New Guinea continues to be a society focused on gathering. Professor Diamond recognizes the difference of crops and protein sources with the evolution of a society around the world. New…

    • 680 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Ongka’s Big Moka

    • 406 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Pigs can built status, prestige and fame for their tribe as a part of moka.…

    • 406 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    From the above sentences, we can know that the pig is personified here. He has his various emotions, like a human. For example, his giving frowning expression, his set smile, his little coy lashes and his eyes filled with disgust and hatred, all these are owned only by human.…

    • 1001 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pigs In Heaven Analysis

    • 643 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Pigs in Heaven starts on a farm somewhere in rural Kentucky where a woman named Alice Greer who is feeling lonely after her cousin Sugar moved away. Alice’s husband gives her little warmth and has a obsession with TV. The story then shifts over to Alice’s daughter Taylor and her adopted daughter Turtle. While they are driving to tour the Grand Canyon they stoop to take a picture at the Hoover Dam. Just when they are leaving Turtle sees a man (Lucky Buster) falls down into the Hoover Dam drainage. When Turtle spots this she tells Taylor who then finds help to get the man out. The two of them are put into the spotlight with an appearance on a talk show for rescuing the man. After the interview on the show Taylor and Turtle head on back to Tucson Arizona to live with Taylor's boyfriend Jax. With Turtle and Taylor out in the open on that talk…

    • 643 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Societal corruption can be shown through Animalistic Behaviors. Thesis: In the classic novel Animal Farm, the author, George Orwell shows how societal corruption can occur through propaganda, pride, and hypocrisy. The book opens with a rebellion being led by the cows on the farm as they fought for their rights and better treatment. This rebellion began with secret meetings being held with all the animals on the farm. Snowball, Napoleon, and Squealer, who led the secret meetings, used the term “Animalism” as a reference to the teachings of Old Major. Old Major was a pig who dreamt of a rebellion against the farmers, which would leave the animals in charge. These early meetings led by three pigs (Napoleon, Snowball, and Squealer), were the early stages of using propaganda to rally and organize the animals of the farm. The use of the term “Animalism” provided a simple and direct message to support the propaganda.…

    • 830 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The pig hunts are used throughout Lord of the Flies to symbolize not only man’s capacity for destruction and violence, but also the basic idea of bloodlust, mass hysteria, and ritual. In the most important pig hunt scene, we are given a vivid description…

    • 714 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pigs unlike cows and chickens are highly intelligent animals. If you kill one pig in front of the others, they know what is occurring and they go crazy with fear knowing that they are next. As babies, they are exposed to painful disfigurements without any anesthesia or pain relievers. Their tail is cut off to decrease tail biting and is confined to overcrowded pens with bars and concrete floors where they live until they reach a specific slaughter weight. While they linger in these overcrowded environments, they are also exposed to extreme crowded conditions during transportation. One pig expert wrote, “death losses during transport are high, amounting to more than eight million per year. It is still cheaper so it becomes a moral issue. Is it right to overload and save $.25 per head while the overwhelming contributes to 80,000 death per year?” (factoryfarming.com). Sadly, this treatment is characteristic of factory farming, which puts profits before of animal…

    • 549 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Pigs in Heaven Essay

    • 990 Words
    • 4 Pages

    When one is raised in a single family, life appears simple. The person has developed an attachment to their parents. He or she is also familiar with one particular society, and the norms of that society are established in their mindset. However, when a second family from an entirely different culture enters the picture, the simple life becomes more complicated. The cultures of the two families are so different that they clash with one another, leaving the one person between it all. It is a dilemma that a six-year-old girl named Turtle Greer must experience in the novel, Pigs In Heaven, by Barbara Kingsolver. Turtle is a young girl who was adopted by a loving mother named Taylor Greer. The two had lived together since Taylor was given Turtle by a woman in a bar, and they have grown a fond mother-daughter relationship with each other. However, since Turtle is Cherokee, the adoption is brought to the attention of the Cherokee Nation, and they claim that the adoption is invalid. They say that Cherokee children must stay within the tribe, that they must be given to a close relative if the biological parents are unable to care for them. The conflict heats up as Taylor tries to defend her right to be Turtle’s guardian and Nation lawyers search for relatives of Turtle. The solution that would seem right for this situation is that if Taylor shares custody over Turtle with Turtle’s blood relatives.…

    • 990 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Peter Singer’s “Down on the Factory Farm” and E.B. White’s “Death of a Pig” illustrate practices of raising animals for human consumption. The care and environment provided for the animals by both White and the factory farmer’s that Singer discusses can be labelled as ‘animal husbandry’. White and the factory farm worker’s animal husbandry methods can be deemed as ethical, or unethical. Bernard E. Rollin defines good animal husbandry as “keeping the animals under conditions to which their natures [are] biologically adapted, and augmenting these natural abilities by providing additional food, protection, care, or shelter” (6). Through this definition of ethics and the criteria established by the “Principles” found in James P. Sterba’s “Reconciling Anthropocentric and Nonanthropocentric…

    • 530 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Through the use of anecdotes in the article “A Savage Life”, Suzanne Winckler effectively points out that it is important to understand where your food comes from. Winckler helps convey to readers that while butchering animals is no fun, it is necessary for the survival of omnivores. She argues that meat-eaters are out of touch with reality; instead of recognizing that an animal must be sacrificed for their meal, most consumers mindlessly devour the food on their plates – without a thought of where their food came from. Winckler states “I am too far gone in my rational Western head to appropriate the ritual of cultures for whom the bloody business of hunting was a matter of survival” (634); in this statement she adequately appeals to logos by helping readers realize most cultures kill animals as a way to gain nourishment – nothing more. Through the use of pathos, logos, and ethos throughout the essay, Winckler appropriately directs readers’ attention to the fact that they should be thankful animals lose their lives for the well-being of humans.…

    • 1095 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays